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rx P abrev tro love. th wille NomaJ 0o mxee bluee A.. mosk at ctmtn , tbat if the entire thought a to each mintite, the bread burgedor heavy; t linen fha o n to this seado I t f pracical examples : Irs. j Asures na she wrote "Uncle a Obin" while attendng to her - arion arland erhuorlne), wift of the pastor the Tirst Oon tional Ohurh, In Springfield 0 planned the archittecture of their n hom and, although she had momasd a fortune by her pen, she arecent guest as "a 1 model ifher." While her in~ adorn the walls, and the fur re corated by her own hands, is the crown of her home, sheis queen, and she Uffirms X ,*ore a woman knows the better keeper, wife and mother she cau "e.'With all these occupations she has i ~ of forty young men in ier hue Sunday-school, which numbers Rose Terry Cooke, in her old-fash. Soned country home, at Winsted, Conn., is equally famonoi as a ook and a poet. She not only writes charming poems about her garden but is up before sun -ise to work in i Her roses are her especial -prU.Cleveland Herald. A 9Tu Laady. ildness is a thing which girls cannot I sdibrd. Delicacy is a thing which can not be lost or found. No art can restore to the grape its bloom. Familiarity Without confidence, without regard, is destructive to all that makes woman ex siting and ennobling. It is the first' duty of a woman to be a lady. Good ', breeding is good sense. Bad manners in a woman is immorality. Awkward ness may be ineradicable. Bashfulness is constitutional. Ignorance of etiquette is the result of circumstances. Alcan Sbe condoned and not banish men or1 wopien from the amenities of their'kind. But self-possessed, unshrinking and ag *gressive coarseness of demeanor may be treckoheod as a State's prison offense, and certainly merits that mild form of re straint cllaa Imprisonment for life. It is a shame for women to lecture on their manners. It is a bitter shame that they need It. Do not be restrained. D~o 1ot 'have impulses that need restraint. Donot wish to dance with the Prince ~osought; feel differently. Be sure ou p' oder honor. Carry yourself so lo 'ly t9ttha32n will look up to you for reward, 3ot at .you in rebuke. The natural sen Stliment of man toward woman is rever 'nese." He loses a large means of grace e is obliged to account her abe to be trained In propripty. A man's Ida a not wounded when a woman fails ,ri~dly wsdom; but if in grace, in timent, in delicacy, in kind nl efound wanting, he re -~ 44 hero Of ihurt.--.GaiL Hamilton. hearts ofa~ ~ -osed Girls. other amn.n who has evidently got '?ds writes as follows con UKeyp,.nosed girls :Any girl in the Scan have a snub nose with touble at all, but not one girl *~,O,00 attains to the ravishing ectability of a dear little pug. There are inconsfderate superflcial observers - ho avr that snubs and pug are very m~ohthe amething.Thssabrd It would be as rational to assert the * identity of .one of Camoens' dainty shepherdesses and a respectable but un intresingcolored washerwoman. - The pug-nosed girl is a distinct type, and she knows it. Possessing a pug nose, she possesses certain privileges ~ dImtunities to which no other sort Ssif2oeed girl can lay claim. Occupy. te peculiar and elevated position, a 1ei at once fasoinating and harrow ~Iu~ Wih her' nose, by right divine, osa-rosebud mouth that anybody can Seeat hal a glanco was made principally tissinabg. Nobody ever dreams of 4 11~n lp which have a long Roman i4 esndnsentinel over them. But girl' lips are not guarded th contrary, they are most accessible. And when she p4she has a great way - j ~ lgthe dear thing; and <ose sympathizes with the at movement and tips It StUe higher, It seems just like a - invitation. That is the fascinat - of the performance. The har prt of it is when, encouraged by pens to be so encouraging you accept the Invitation-adfn i# is nat that sort of a pug-nosed a)R tis adismal business, this, pug-nosed Airi is nut to the 1l kissing and her rosebud e' d to be but a delusion The little ray of hope that he gloomy horizon under oholy ciroumstanoesis that while shaI know al too *Ressome, unmanagable are facts reoddcon nosedWhich prove 4n r revoo Stof contrition, of' the sorrow she has been tetty lips a they 4*4d9 to yield - estended a in this hen a well loan hr t her W 8oott. bile here last season with . went one day into a hool and made I oreith a. is. target and in o 0kig lay64 that would e caused to ataticaj rave his wide-rimmed hat and flowin noks while he spun around in a will anoe of delight. OomIng Iack again 46 peoppe in pri rate life, it be menion -that tiO rie of a oment Judge is so good a hot with h shot-gun and small arms hat, when she wants a pair of oiokens Or a real, she takes her gun or revolver m, go'g Qut in the yard, shoots the hickens' heads off at twenty yards. " How do women handle revolvers ?" he reporter asked of a clerk in a fire rms store. "Some of them handle them as well a anybody could. But others take hold f them cautiously, and do not know the 3arrel from the butt end. In the sum mer, when our patrons from Arizona and New Me U ni tie regions come in, the merchants are accompanied by their wives, and the women handle the re volvers just as easily and gracefully as any man could." The clerk showed the reporter a col lection of revolvers, and pointed out the "bull dog" pattern of small five-shoot era, with silver platings and ivory han dles as the style most affected by women. They cost $9 and $10. Double dirks, with white bone handles and two and a half inch blades, were also pointed out as weapons purchasod and carried by women, but, he said, not nearly so many dirks were sold as revolvers.-St. Louis Republican. low Henry Clay Prepared His Speeches. When he deemed it necessary to make n argumentative speech, or what is enerally called a set speech, he had his >ooks piled into a carriage, and with his ervant went just over the Maryland line o the plantation of Hon. Charles H. Jalvert, and there remained in privacy mntil he was ready to address the Senate, air. Calvert was one of the wealthiest nen and leading agricnlturists in the state of Maryland. Mr. Clay's room was upon the ground floor upon the back dlde of the house, and opened upon a arge ,portico from which there was ~nagficent scene , as attractive a place as a retired statesman ould desire, mad the freedom of the plantation was uis, with all its numerous servants, comn [mng and going, arriving and returning, is he pleased. Mr. Clay's room there gives notoriety to the establisbhrient to bhis day. Few strangers at Washington in the summer time fail to visit it. It has sver been the object of the proprietors to keep the room as he left it. There are his easy-chair, dressing-gowns and slippers. But his set or argumentative speeches were not what gave him char aoter. He was not like Mr. Oalhuoun, when he made an uninterrupted speech in the Senate, nor like Webster in the Supreme Courtb-room. It was for his forensic or disputative talents that he was distinguished above all other men. Although the Senate and the galleries would always be filled when it was an nounced that Mr. Clay was to speak, yet It was always with the expectation and hope that some one would interrupt him and a gand intellectual sparring exposi tion would take place. Of all men whom [ ever heard I never know one who could endure so muoh interruption and discuss so many side issues and yet finish his speech with the entire facts and the en tire line of argument marked out in his mind from the beginning, as Mr. Clay. Qould the enemies of Mr. Clay have formed a combination never to interrupt him nor be interrupted by him, they would have deprived him of much' of his Senatorial glory. The best speeches of Oalhoun, Webster and Benton were well considered, and read now much as when delivered. Not so with Mr. Clay's best peeches. They were uinpremeditated, and as much a surprise to himself as to his audience. Shorthand reporting had not- then reached itspresent condition. Thus, Clay must sufer with posterity incapable of hearing the varied intona tions of his ever-pleasing vole, or of seeing his gestlculationus, his rising upon his toes, his stamp of the foot, his march down the aisles until his long fingers would almost touch the President's desk and his backward tread to his seat, all the while speaking; his shako of the head, his dangling hair, and his audience in the galleries rising and leaning over as if to catch ever syllable. 'As an imn promptu, out-and-thus debater, always ready, never thrown om his guard, where is your equal of Henry Clay? Pomn a LctCure byj John Wentworth, The Beggars' Opera. Dr. Swift had been observing once to Mr. Gay what an odd, pretty sort of thing a Newgate pastoral might make. Glay was inohmed to try at such a thing for some time, but aftewards thought it would be better to write a comedy on the same plan. This was what gve rise to the "Beggars' Opera." He bgnon It, and when first he mentione it to Swift, the Doctor did not quite like the project. As he carried it on he showed what huewrote to both of us; and we now and then gae a correction or a word or two ofadvice, but it was wholly of his own writing. When it was done, neither of us thought it would suoceed. We showed It to Congreve, who, after reading it over, said: "It would either take greatly, or be damned confoundly." We were all, at the first ight of It, in great uncertinty of te ve 8 W we were much encorge y pveinaI~the Duke of Agle, who sat ia~buso us, ' t will do... "Tswasa ood1 while ar ihstset 4 ,andso gave us ad to4 ttW Du)ad a more pate GIve aMuch an he 0an, r M-onM [or anrew baet, 3elfhialny you have mrridhi [or aving. Baise a rowf hdare to bow plea anty to an old ladYfriend. 9t eerything Me woman next doo gets whether $'a can afford it or not. Provide any kind of a j4ck-up dim nor for him when you don't expec t rit out sometimes when you ar good and mad that you wish you ha married some other fellow you ued t go with. If he has an extra amount of brai: work and comes home with his nervou system all on a stretch-don't try to kee] the children quiet. Tell them to mai all the noise they want to, and thei father is nothing but an old crosspatc] anyway. Row TO SPOIL A WIFB. How will this do? Snarl at her. Make her clean house untidy by you: slovenly habits. Find fault with her. Boss her out of her shoes. Always have the last word. Be extra cross when she isharassed b3 the work and worry of wash day. Quarrel with her for trifles. Never be on time to your meals. Growl when she forgets through i multiplicity of duties to sew buttoms ox your shirts. Pay no attention to providing for th4 household and tell her nothing about itb expenses. Spend the price of several new bon nets for eigars, and then skip the bon nets. Tell her plainly you have married he to do your work. Raise a row if she dares to bo% pleasantly to an old-time gentlemi friend. Find never ending fault if she happen to want anything she sees the womai next door having. Grumble when she provides a pick-u dinner. Let it out sometimes when you ar good, and mad that you wish you ha< married some other girl you used to g with. If you have had a hard day's work il the store or office, go home and let ou your gall on this poor woman, who ha baked and ironed, and mended, an< tended children since sunrise. Don't tr to hold your peevish disposition in chech Growl and fuss and fame and find faul with the little parent woman whose ros cheeks you one time kissed, and swol by all that's good that you would lov and cherish her through life and deatia The thing is about as long as broat brethren.-Rockland Cou~ier. Love-Making in 1891. When women shall have obtained their Rights Edwin-" Believe me, dearest-" Angelina-" Pardon me, Edwin, but that the best adjective you can use The word " dearest" implies that I hav~ cost you a ~eat deal-have been ver expensive~ ow, when I prepanred ota settslements with my solicitor, I--" [Explains the Law of Real and Pei sonal Property.] Edwiu-." Thanks, darling, your lectur has been delightful. But see, the moor light tinges the trees without-" Anigelina-" Moonlight? I am gla you have memtioned the moon. Do gro know that our planetary system is-' [Exhaustively canvasses the who] system of modern asitronomy.] Edwin-" Wonderful ! But the nighi ingale has begun her sweet singing Angelina-" Really!i That remind me, you told me the other day. that yo knew little or nothing of natural history I have an excellent memory, and will r< cite a few chapters of White's 'Se: borne ' to you. [Does so.] Edwin, (awaking from his slumber) "Ah, indeed!i But -come, my ow one-" Angelina-" Beloved one, as accurac is to be more esteemed than affection, d not call me thine. Until I am marrie I am a femme solo, and even when ii are united the tendonoy of modern legii lation is to separate the parties. It wt not so in the past-" [Gives ahistory of the world from tli earliest agesdJ Edwin (yawning)-" Charming!i Mo interesting I Sweet Angelina, yon spea so well, that I should like to hear yo1 voice mocking that nightingale. Sins darling, sing I Angelina-" I would rather toll yc what I know of thorough bass. Bih first let me correct you. I can scarce] rival the nightingale. The human frau differs materially from the frames < birds and animals." [Lectures upon anatomy in all il branches Edwin (nhis sleep)-" Grand!i Ver good!I (Waking.) .Ah i I mustbe ofi Farewell, Angelina, the hours will seer years when I am away from you." Angelina-" Then they should no There need be no confusion of time i your case, as you are not about to trav4 round the world. Certainly, if yo were, you would find your watch losin as you moved southward. In connectio with the subject I may say a little abot ' time.' You must know, then, that - [Rapidly sketches the diflerence of tb~ real and ecclesiastical equinox, th Gregrian reform, etc., etc.] Ewin (tearing himself away-"Fart well, dearest-I should say own one, < rather femme eole. Good-by until I se [E toattmptto escape to America to avoid damages for a breach of prorz Angeln ."ortunately I have take m~mdian degree ndcan read hi [Exit to har solicitor torestrain him!i Women's Rights Among the Jlottentott Women's rights appeat to be well sn eatained and jealously guarded amon, th. "oikoI. "In their- houses th woman, or'taras, Is sh impreme ruler thodusband has nothin; atall to say Whi1l inhemen take the tmi at borne t have not a of the -bk~ h of h e prstehoi I r womea~oi ot p;therefore, at heaththwom e . xouples, nver sees ~h t wo befor and thez 1z eti selelts beelooking o.' Theoher is shown ro to a number I of well-to-do Ohinamon, and, afterA4hY o have inspected her ,e is subMttedto what may be calleA bli auotion. At a a recent sale at y young trl s aged about nineteen wAS offered, and, 3after some spirited bidding, she was i purchased by wealthy Chinese store. r keeper, whose place of business is in i one of the leading towns of New South Wales, for $120. The melanoholy aspect - of the Celestial girl, as she wen', aw in company with the man who purchasa her, was deplorable to the last degree. North Chita Herald. IT's very provoking when the editor writes it " Meeting of the masses," and the compositor, when setting it up, puts a space in the wrong place and makes it read " Meeting of them asses."-Ken tucky State JournaL Its star Sim As..ding. In a recent call upon Mr. W. H. Me. Allister, 206 Front street, general agent i for the sale of the Star Chewing Tobacco, ho thus spoke to one of our reporters: "I was tortured with pain from acute rheumatism, and cared not whether I lived or died. I tried St. Jacobs Oil - just two applications of which entirely - cured me.' -San Francisco (CaL) Call. .PRoF. Moos, of Heidelberg, found, in ten and a half years, that twenty out of eighty railroad engineers applied to him for treatment of affections of the ear. 5 He thinks the hearing of engineers should be tested as carefully as their v1s10n. Ex~-SANrrAnY CoM. RUIFUs K. gIREWAN B of New Orleans, was cured o': a severe' attack of rheumatism by St. Jacobs Oil, ) so we see by an item in the Columbusi (Ga.) .Enquircr-Sun. At ANagricultural writer says : " Hens seldom pay expenses after they are 8 yoars-old." When they arc 8, and be .fore losing their teeth, they should be t converted into spring chickens and sold to some tough restaurant--keeper.--. a Picayunc.________ *THF World's Dispensary and Invalids' Hotel, ,at Buffalo, N. Y., destroyed by fire a yar ago. is rebuilt and full of patients. For "Invalid's Guide Book," giving particulars and terms of treatment, add ress, with two stamps, WonLD's DIsPENsABY MEDICAL AssoOIATION, Baffalo, ] N. Y. _ _ _ _ _ _ SSOME poet says " holy minds in healthy bodies live." Yes, oh, yes ; now we know what makes the lusty Bitting eBull, whlo never had an ache nor a pain in his lie, and such a meek and lorvly r ninded skin full of holiness! That's ntst about as much as the poet's know about such thin gs.-H'awkeye. (Could Ilardly Stand on lier. FeeS. B. V. PIEnCEn, Mf. D., Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Bii -I must tell you what your medicine has donie 1for mo. Before taking your "Favorite Pre ai scrition" I could hardly stand on my feet, but by fllowing your advice, I am perfectly cured. e The "Favorite PrescrIption" is a wonderful medicine for debilitatc and nervous females. I cannot express how thankful I am to you foI -, your advice. Yours truly, Mus. CORNELIA ALLIsON, Peosta, Ia. B u MosT of the advocates of cremnatior ~. are people over whom it would be use e. less to erect a monument1 and their ashei t- may possibly do some httle good in the garden. " Their Oeenpation Gone.*P R. V. PrEnOE, MI. D., Buffalo, N.Y.: I was at tacked with congestion of the lungs, sorenesi Y over the liver, severe pain in the joints; a burnn 0 fever and general giving away of the whole sys d torn. ~lailing to find relief in remedies prescribed, e I tried your "Golden Medical Discovery." 11 3. effected my entire cure. Your medicines havi only to be used to be appreciated. If every Bfanmily would give them a trial, nine-tenths o1 the doctors would, like O:hello, filid their occo. eo pationi gone. Youra traly, L. B. Mc31LNw, . D., Breesport, N. Y k OF PAPER mills the United States has Lr nearly 50 per cent, more than an~y othei r, country in the world, and what is mnor< we consume about as much paper as th( u mils make. y Free Once Moae. e B~RoIoroD, VA.. Jan.,81, 1881. H1. H. WARNEB & Co.: Sire-For five years suffered from kidney affections. Your Saft Kidney anad Liver Cure freed me from pain :5 rebtored my flesh and thorough cre me. THREE people can keep a secret when a two of them are dead. SUFFERERS from Constipation should mak< b- one trial of Kidney-Wort and be cured. )l PEOPLE's intentions can only be de n cided by their conduct. KiEdney Disease. SDeposit.,dGravel, etc9 cured by "Buchupaiba." $1Cit nd Jfor pamphlet to E. . WELLS, Jersey e ._ _ _ _ Fox dyspepsia, indigesticai, depression of -spirit. and general debility, in their vatious ~r forms ; also as a preventative against fever anid e ago and other intermittent fevers, the " Ferro hosphorated Elixir of Caliss," made by Casiwell, Hasard & Co., New York, and sold by ', ant uruggists, Is th it toic; and for patients -recovermihg from foyer or other sickness, it has no equal. S e 4.N m S&tit.Cessied. .'r. Ktoute's. Femuale PiRls C (ure~ all Femule Diseases, Enlarged Splean e etc. The best Pemale l'ili in the world. Price -$1 per box. I will al.> send mf Chili anel Li ver Pad, wa~ichi cures all Liver Diseass#. Warran ted1 to-cure chills in fifteenu ,nute. .Price et.25 by mail. Addasss ti. JA 8T0UTh, Oxford, Miss. aI~4 edb0 -Whobee. a og emI - to t bility to fu dedelect ,e meal to fbrtunate - do becabbe Wvfred with.a bard, i 41 ith~i~ 680to Ui4?lest or m n Worltin oz~eote?~ a"p war inobi n ly* aeioe attacked, Aithoug I~ ~ ~ 1 7j1 Ut Rado bgeoldofunoerstanid. a-ten~l. To F locomoton; this, 4 toebwhen conquered. atlu=enemny, starting Iemany politicians durij 0stileways. There comes 1 i'nsclous fellow whcu the hr bcne and muselo than he I 0mfort and he finds him TO 910 11lace. hid shoes pinch him an Obc U ea fie the protlctib liy of ap plyi to Dame Nature fpr more room or a house a rt on to. - nere - uzt. Nature v s to th ll*, but her own good Cl pro~ds a new hoMe, so that the enter little creature 0_008 not wander about , it Is provided for suitably, as was the old mailor, who 4ropped his rheumatism and crabbedness n o UPPlied the Great German Memedy, ST.- AbOs VIL. This last, however, Waysound rather lhy to the oke tiI reader, a tosuch we would rely in lan gtoo plain to be mlsunderstood- words ii usaing facts that even the waves of time cannot wash away or scaly epitheta affet. ST. JACOBS OIL to-day has rendered the lives and homes of my riads of sufrerers brighter than ever the electrie light can whicheople pause to admire alon the way. Stili more appfly served than the ol sailor was an Invalid, who wrote thus concerning his case . "CROOKED HAERTEL." Aecept a thousand thanks for that 'golden remedy." I suffered fbr many years with rbeu matic pain In my limbs. My lefs were drawn together, and People called me ' Crooked Ibaer t.e 1 used ST. JACOns Of and was 0tered, and now feel so welt that I think I could dance, as in my young days; JOHN TIAERTLI. Pe tnont. lli. LEBRATEDS The feeble and emactited, sumbring from dyapopsi we .ndigestion Sn any form, are advised, for the sako of thei own bodiiy and ipenital comfort, to try HIostetter's StlonE ach Blitters. ladies of the moat, delicate sonastituti~n tea tify to its harmlenr~ness and its xestorativo propeiti.,. Phlysican, everywhere,'disgusted with She adulternte4 ligqtors of commorce, plrescribe it as the safgst and sus rehiable of all rstomaohica. For salo tby all Droggists ait Doaleoa ge neralfly. C S ~ l HO-4n TI To ua o i.d Lv ya essah~ de.oe wNTch be Nhmt. r LIl A ST. Aotm Me.ABws. o lhnilome n d. e linteWrtsss grpenf a ure never s4e togv mI espe turea where all otberefa 0 fDrug . ow *.AN d au n. THRESHER free. TH il AULTMAN & TAYIaR00.. Man=Said.O. e.3( roe ntely neW for agnt. ,utrit f ree. H. WV.I G R A H AM C0.,Bouton,Maa li A TreatIse on their FTN eeI~'dy cure RENT FI.. Ii.J. -- - rOWFMAN,P.O.Box.138,Chicago,1hl. WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED. New Edition, 118,000 Words, (3000 more than any other En~xlish Dictionary Four Pages Colored Plates, 300 Engravings, (nearly three times. the number In any other Diet'y,) also contains a Biograph-. ioal Dictionar giving brief important facts concerning over 9OOnoted persons. Recommended by State Stpt's o Education in I36 States, and by 50 Collego Presidouts. a. a . MER RIAM & CO., P'ub'rs.SBoringfield. Mass. SUJMMER REMORT Hea'th, Pleasure, Comfort. Ho for the iMounh' ilns of Virgiomii. Prie o suit~ the lirm:2. Fine M&dicinal WVa~ers. For Ctrculars :ddress F. .J. CHI-APM AN, _____________Roanoke, Va, y hm'etpraphy. osrIIPlacaeste 14horthamut. I. Croialogu.. 0S worksr, with Pnuographio alphabet ad litrilrfor b annra se at on application. Adeaw, HEALTH IS WEALTH! Da. 1E. 0. Wast's NIavD AwN Baarw TasatXC.,; a oeciflo for Hysteria, Dlzelnes., Cenvulsions, Nervous If ea dche, Mental be preaulon, Lots of Memory Prama turo Old Age, caused byover-exertion, which 'leads to uansery, decay and death. On. box will cure reoent oases. Each bx conitalne one month's trealtment. One doll r a bo:1i r.ix boxes for die dollars; sat :l mail prepe! on receipt of 1rice. We guarante six boxes to cure anp an.wtieach order reoeived by tra for six boxes,a4 conmpanied with five dolla!., we will seed the par chaser our written garantee to return the assyIf t e Ireatment does not effrat a ours. Otaarant~ Epe osl ay a. 1. atN udbed . f erea b~ rse. Add s ef assm as. s t.d 4 P of acint and the rise a d f of a middle es, the erusadeeff ion, the disovery and - $to, to. It contains 673 An* historeal ost complete History of she Wer Addresswron rves x. Psnr EVERYONE WiUl get valuable Informationa by sending for circular to J. TOUIWR#JB ots E s$ warb in the U.S.terthe ENMTERPRI1S CA BREIAG CO. OUG0. TerrItrr Gie. Catalegue F Anti-Liquor To come before the public with an absolute - cure for drunkenness,or a specific to remove the desire for alcoholic stim-0 ulants, seems to many, we have no doubt, an absurdity; such is the case, nevertheless, and before offering our medi cine to the public we thoroughly convinced ourselves by actual ex pxeriment that it would do all we claim for it. BROWN'S IRON DITTERS, a complete non-alcoholic tonic, wvill not only remove all the nervous disorders and weakness remaining after ex cessive indulgence caused by /4guar, but will absolutely kill that desire for artificial stimulants that every intern perate man feels driving him to ruin. BROWN'S IT&ON BIrrERS is also a rei>.rkable and trustwor~ .-remedy (having the confidence of the medical- profes sion) for Dyspepsia, In digestion, and all disor ders of the nerves, mus eles, and digestive or gans. As a spring tonic foc- ladies, children, and all1 that need new life and richi blood, it is'without an equal. Price $1 .oo a bottle. Get the genuine. ENTLEMEN:I have used Dii. iiAltThn's .InON (twenty-ive years in mecdicline, have never found~ lIoN TroNIC does. In many cases of Nervous Prosi poverished condition of the blood, this peerless reme (ases th:tt have hafled some of our most eminent ph: utble remediy. I 3rescribe it in preference to any lr a8 DR. IARTlt'8 IRON ToNIC is a necesty in my ST. Lotiq. Mo., Nov. It a Ives color to the bloo, - irtur'al healthful tone to the <llgentivo organs, andl *aervoen a ystecm, snak ing ft applicable to Gener'Er Debility, Loss of A . tite, Prostrat lon of .'a Powers arul Impotence. MANUFACTURED BY THE DR. HARTER M1 agouts at. work, but the following e tracts shw the grea n aborotaubscribe~;um rotst for the da'sork ftatorof ~o rl, wits:-"In one week I have adue nearly 150, akun eflamost overy bouso." An agent at work in Canada writesA ~tonliihodl at my own success." Lettors making similiar et mnako money much faster than agents were ever known to 9N no can rail to mako groat ay. Taut & Co., publ ehere m nako over $20 a day. AOMNYS WANTEID for the wel -known, ~ 9 ill: tratu fam:ily publicationn Aerica, a nhoeTra 9true; each number contains 24 large pages, 96 longceJuma passeud. 12 BzAUTruu AND ELtOANT (un~oo GOSiyzg saR 9ton of the ordinarypictures that~ ar iven to subscribers. As pIctures ever befor presentod to t e subscribers for any -'loraldt3 months free to all who now subscribe, or fifteen m 9subscrIbe at once, and taken together with the immense sey "we send to$ toe who order Outfits It would notb be to 9enable all who take agencies to ma'ko mone faster than ew mannerlndssa crtnattf ge e showing that you are api *hat ~5certs besetwhen It is orderd w ce ba ely pa$ furnish tree. As a further safeguard, we require every perso 9letter:.-Taus & Co. Send me at once the agnt's new Ou *Outfit for the purps of gong to work at the business anld cost of packing. Enclose I an 2fienta. Name--. P< *take postag stamps, anud It ls ter to send them than to I *good modition of every Outfit that Is ordered. The malfs cr money In a common letter. If we have more ap licaton~ fo 6return the 26 cents sent fo sae anrpaeking toaypes 9all respects, or who, en t heusies Is not Nly sati *AOBNTs CONDUOT THE BusgNse. The aen haylng gded ~showmng the mammoth Illustrated pape and elegntremi ~paylng only $1, will receive the paefr fifteen month1and *as thle agent ma thhiJ best, thnames ofthe sub r se is received, we fradto te agent the full set ot1 prem ~entiti~ng him or her to heaper for fifteen months. Weti 9and con I nne regularly o fifee months. When the gen to the subscribers, coleting SI flrom each; thus atwill s sand easy. We garantee the safb delivey in godcondition *while passing trough the mall we are al ey ready to fill tI PaKMIUN Onlaeo. 8o much room woul b elred that art, sash ne of which Is worqlt tan of those ordiarly nrA tOossng the Meadow. No.4I Oan Se~ aa o. h 5OhIld and Fet Lamb No. 8-Onr I~te Gardener.N,9a :Mother and Child. oi. I2-Happy Hors. BPAusT4W.. ar Outfit at onc and vthe essti.a~E Amaking such et pa I7 ut the nvestmen of ~Ii lied a royabsns.Mn gnswow atth nbe or should ntdela n~bi~ 9;s toa all for It l# -~~ltaalt~g~ I~I3 Onot appear in he ~pr n~ol anv~ Thoseh aent i *Al gnt atr wo d ao s whaowr one r n ourkow expento, o A.ini' rJ -77' : will curm air ri 69 %lout, allo troubles, 6" laidOdvo an expelftfiot6U 00nqoml erytaeof dvelopme$rth ede Ifor stianints Ah I etvsgam~ Cod DeOthBeplsnekDprswo4 VhaS feeling oif bearist down, causng" l andbeekacho,R ti S n It will At all trmtI and undot a harmoniy with anta-orndie gn' For the ure of )CWidtPsC plait 4o 'itbeg a fompound Is unsurpasm1i. TA X ( LYDIA E. PINeUIAN'6. NTvt k ]POUND is prearo at us and us ANW tn, mas. Prioo*L $.ix bottles for $S. A ' Inthe form of pills, also In the forn o I1'' receipt of price, $1 per bot for either.Mr freely answers all letter of'Inquiry. tend ti p Iot. Address an above. Mfentin this aper. T0 family should bo without LYDIA P. PU*EAN J tvER P e8. They cure consipation, biliousntiW ad tornidity of the lIter. 26 oents perbo. C AoID %old by all Dragiate. - HO' IMPRO ED O3 ULAt SAirW iaM O i .With universal laog Send for eam Double Eo reCIRCULARS r entreFriUon. t A Fepmd. auVfsEtired by A LEy IRON WosipN, b N G.o And trdity o ndae of the Kier DNnt e YS* Ite~ne the a~se f h ol g onl tULAtis of Bhumtism Fctn THOUAND OF ASE havIfie4 b AEY Riv, i kn, SaEh T TPERETL CUR I. faobwenb m ise-e ourf t r IN J ES uE8 Our avutterafte Latoft ane 02Brheoither if flenlargdtmf0$e ncuitg the lhadrial 4 e A eN q e alieustd, tie aii theotse KlC , 1 JesseD .O m e aR er O d ea h D l wD fe hi WA LN RcARdSe-On in Cout.r,thFod t~jt7.j AWKP.engrIaving~ of Gov.1 Cr*itenden,.. A....t4 ~JJJ~ Ou IIItr. ATdir4. (.hrulas freej . Otatsde. 2 - Thir ilithe onl treatry. jBee sma ih llertditioneE atd ilstrat amssmmsamniuatt Lar.atl ad~ BWheaprat.. CCAT D . CW. aNo. I Wst 4thSt.. iacinath , O. Publishers' n rAtanao G........Twen-h.-'89 Persone' arg rillaute.OtisO~= anies Ste Thin. la~o~ .ru hsoy.Ie oo JilAEpl 1ni~cdiu On i .I'INTI.*W itxi, 4.- lj"e5I.,t.t.., 0 Mineurriy Bangor, iMe. taxfde of rons, Iertvla a platable f(os-u. '2'he on y ~ps-era' tLos of Irons that wEilt not blackenia the teeth9Bo chewacteristic of othe~r Iron ineparatios. 'toic n m prcteand inexience of eanything toive the reenalis thtat, DRi. IIAlRTER'8 ration, Femae Deases, Iiyspepoa, sand an im dy hats, in my hands, mad some wonderful clares. 81can hve iede 2 ti8greOath ad incomapar )ractice. Dit. RIJ1EICT SAM3U1 ~DIOINE Co., 213 N. MAIN ST.1ST. LO0IS. e. In our lim~ied space we cannot p)ubbshl Tjtef~ value oft the business, and are fair samples of msn re Now York writes:--''Yesterday I secured a vrs ap to over 50." A lady agent asworkin theSate ofsa g,,subscribers for your paper. I secure a subserter at -"The first ten days Iwas out, lamade over *O.lI graas-j atomenta are constantly coming to us. Aliwbo etagageY make it before. Any one can become a successful agent.$ have always been in the front, and now make by farth t at all uncommon for those who work at this biisiden; * *- ~' eat family publication Turn Iu~.Uqtvan FsAxuv liexss $1la year. The Herald is the lacgest gnd most elegantiy~ a anythn tothe contrar makes statements that are n~t as. All ever heeooetought of outdone and fhaa to BE arSBORsaatxa Each of thea. ohromos iswot * beautiful works of high art, these chromes fur stqrpass any9 *X publication. Aw ExtaAORoIxARY Qlrra. We send th ynths in all for only $1- this great ofrer induces people to~ aidard publication, andtho 12 beautiful and valuable pe st every house they visit. Oum PaIyAYX TZngS TA uN publish our terms hiere; \our ternps are most libe~ sr they expected -to at any business. Ot Ae1~t.')ws ever placed ina the hand. of antbyay blishers. lion li'sts, instructions ior working in the most n st pointod by us as agent. This large, expensie ons ordering it, who do not mecan busin. w~ ecas a (ar the packing and postage alone; the Outttefw a who orders an Ontt to sendnas aooehfb1 ~ing Ifit. I faithfully p romiss and assure you ttI otdert not in ordler to get it free by just paying tho tage - ast-offlee address--. County----. t.,- W si silver in a letter. We garantee the se 4lny a very trustworthy, and it is best to sendsmleno f agencies from any locality than we need$ oohw~ ni at -once~and the Outfits are of course not sent.1 who, on receiving the Outfit, is not satfi~dwatl f fled. No one faile-all are mote thanatvtdq And received an Outfit goes around buSIo aim eomos; he expiains that thos* * fb1D5 all12 of the ohremos fee. Then oned a Veek -~ s ~ cured are forwarded to us; loots a lisl im chromos for eaoh subsoil -, a :aen ecomenne to send th I receives the chrom~ ege ~ ~ ~ 4., en that all conneetee wi of all that isordrd iseorder over noour we cannotv L to subses e0~ h1osa Lains ~ .